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The benchmark interest rate in the United States was last recorded at 4 percent. This dataset provides the latest reported value for - United States Fed Funds Rate - plus previous releases, historical high and low, short-term forecast and long-term prediction, economic calendar, survey consensus and news.
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30 Year Mortgage Rate in the United States decreased to 6.23 percent in November 26 from 6.26 percent in the previous week. This dataset includes a chart with historical data for the United States 30 Year Mortgage Rate.
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Dataset Description
This dataset contains the actual and predicted federal funds target rate for the United States from 1990 to 2023. The federal funds target rate is the interest rate at which depository institutions lend their excess reserves to each other overnight. It is set by the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) and is a key tool used by the Federal Reserve to influence the economy.
The dataset includes the following five columns:
Release Date: The date on which the data was released by the Federal Reserve. Time: The time of day at which the data was released. Actual: The actual federal funds target rate. Predicted: The predicted federal funds target rate. Forecast: The forecast federal funds target rate.
Data Usage
This dataset can be used for a variety of purposes, including: - Analyzing trends in the federal funds target rate over time. - Forecasting the future path of the federal funds target rate. - Assessing the effectiveness of monetary policy. - Data Quality
The data for this dataset is of high quality. The Federal Reserve is a reputable source of data and the data is updated regularly.
Data Limitations
The data for this dataset is limited to the United States. Additionally, the data does not include information on the factors that influenced the Federal Open Market Committee's decision to set the federal funds target rate.
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Source is Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. Retrieved from FRED, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis; https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/"NAME OF MEASURE" Column names are "Name of Measure" from FRED's catalog.
Group 1: Yield Curve Indicators These focus on the shape of the Treasury yield curve, comparing longer-term to shorter-term rates. They are primarily used to: Signal Economic Expectations: A normal curve (longer-term rates higher) suggests expectations of growth and possibly inflation. A flattening or inverted curve (short-term rates near or above long-term) could signal a potential slowdown or recession.
Group 2: Monetary Policy and Market Expectations These spreads look at the difference between Treasury yields and the Federal Funds Rate, the primary tool of monetary policy. They indicate: Market vs. Fed Outlook: Widening spreads could suggest the market expects faster rate hikes or higher long-term inflation than the Fed is signaling. Narrowing spreads could mean the opposite. Risk-Taking: When these spreads widen, it can be a sign of investors moving from safe Treasuries to riskier assets in search of yield.
Group 3: Credit Risk and Market Sentiment These spreads focus on corporate bond yields relative to Treasuries, highlighting the added compensation investors require for holding riskier corporate debt. They signal: Credit Conditions: Widening spreads suggest deteriorating credit conditions or lower risk tolerance among investors. Narrowing spreads suggest the opposite. Economic Confidence: Investors often demand higher premiums for corporate bonds during economic uncertainty, widening these spreads.
Group 4: Breakeven Inflation Rates The breakeven inflation rate represents a measure of expected inflation derived from 30-Year Treasury Constant Maturity Securities (BC_30YEAR) and 30-Year Treasury Inflation-Indexed Constant Maturity Securities (TC_30YEAR). The latest value implies what market participants expect inflation to be in the next 30 years, on average.
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Fixed 30-year mortgage rates in the United States averaged 6.40 percent in the week ending November 21 of 2025. This dataset provides the latest reported value for - United States MBA 30-Yr Mortgage Rate - plus previous releases, historical high and low, short-term forecast and long-term prediction, economic calendar, survey consensus and news.
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This dataset looks back at the history of lending rates from 1956 to present and investigates the effects of significant historical events on prime lending rate. The data, which was sourced from trusted sources, provides an insight into how major political and economic developments have influenced the cost of borrowing in different countries. By examining which events had an impact on interest rates and by how much, this dataset could prove invaluable for researchers looking to understand historical financial trends or for investors trying to understand past market behaviour. Take a step back in time with this comprehensive collection of lending data ā it could be the key to unlocking greater insights into our financial history!
For more datasets, click here.
- šØ Your notebook can be here! šØ!
This dataset contains historical prime rates from 1956 to present, as well as significant events that may have affected the prime lending rate. With this data, you can analyze changes in the average majority prime rate charged by banks and any events that may have contributed to this change.
To get started with this dataset, you'll want to make sure you understand the columns it contains: Year: This is the year of the data point. (Integer)
Average Majority Prime Rate Charged By Banks: This is average prime rate charged by banks in the majority of he year for a given time period. (Float)
Significant Events: Significant events that may have impacted or shifted the Prime Lending Rate during a certain period or throughout history. (String)You can then use this information to begin exploring and comparing periods where there were drastic shifts inside of one year within this data set as it provides an overall view intoprime lending during these different times periods along with what plausible external or internal factors couldāve caused them. To do so, you can use descriptive statistics such a means and medians, along with graphing tools such as line charts and scatter plots to observe any correlations between fluctuations inPrime Lending Rates and Significant Events taking place concurrently at different points in time throughout history over six decades §§ when both economic states seem prosperous or abysmal for comparison purposes so we can identify driving forces behind certain trends inside our data set
- Create a timeline visualization of major prime rate events in the US to show the influence of various political and economic factors on interest rates.
- Superimpose this data over monthly trends of mortgage and auto loan interest rates to illustrate the impact that movements in the prime lending rate have on consumer borrowing.
- Determine which banks currently offer loans with the lowest prime rates, by tracking historic trends against current market conditions for lenders
If you use this dataset in your research, please credit the original authors. Data Source
License: Dataset copyright by authors - You are free to: - Share - copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format for any purpose, even commercially. - Adapt - remix, transform, and build upon the material for any purpose, even commercially. - You must: - Give appropriate credit - Provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. - ShareAlike - You must distribute your contributions under the same license as the original. - Keep intact - all notices that refer to this license, including copyright notices.
File: historical_prime rate.csv | Column name | Description | |:-------------------------------------------------|:---------------------------------------------------------------------------| | Year | Year of the average majority prime rate charged by banks. (Integer) | | Average majority prime rate charged by banks | The average majority prime rate charged by banks in a given year. (Float) | | Significant Events | Significant events that may have had an effect on the prime rate. (String) |
If you use this dataset in your research, please cr...
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š¦ Synthetic Loan Approval Dataset
A Realistic, High-Quality Dataset for Credit Risk Modelling
šÆ Why This Dataset?
Most loan datasets on Kaggle have unrealistic patterns where:
Unlike most loan datasets available online, this one is built on real banking criteria from US and Canadian financial institutions. Drawing from 3 years of hands-on finance industry experience, the dataset incorporates realistic correlations and business logic that reflect how actual lending decisions are made. This makes it perfect for data scientists looking to build portfolio projects that showcase not just coding ability, but genuine understanding of credit risk modelling.
š Dataset Overview
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Total Records | 50,000 |
| Features | 20 (customer_id + 18 predictors + 1 target) |
| Target Distribution | 55% Approved, 45% Rejected |
| Missing Values | 0 (Complete dataset) |
| Product Types | Credit Card, Personal Loan, Line of Credit |
| Market | United States & Canada |
| Use Case | Binary Classification (Approved/Rejected) |
š Key Features
Identifier:
-Customer ID (unique identifier for each application)
Demographics:
-Age, Occupation Status, Years Employed
Financial Profile:
-Annual Income, Credit Score, Credit History Length -Savings/Assets, Current Debt
Credit Behaviour:
-Defaults on File, Delinquencies, Derogatory Marks
Loan Request:
-Product Type, Loan Intent, Loan Amount, Interest Rate
Calculated Ratios:
-Debt-to-Income, Loan-to-Income, Payment-to-Income
š” What Makes This Dataset Special?
1ļøā£ Real-World Approval Logic The dataset implements actual banking criteria: - DTI ratio > 50% = automatic rejection - Defaults on file = instant reject - Credit score bands match real lending thresholds - Employment verification for loans ā„$20K
2ļøā£ Realistic Correlations - Higher income ā Better credit scores - Older applicants ā Longer credit history - Students ā Lower income, special treatment for small loans - Loan intent affects approval (Education best, Debt Consolidation worst)
3ļøā£ Product-Specific Rules - Credit Cards: More lenient, higher limits - Personal Loans: Standard criteria, up to $100K - Line of Credit: Capped at $50K, manual review for high amounts
4ļøā£ Edge Cases Included - Young applicants (age 18) building first credit - Students with thin credit files - Self-employed with variable income - High debt-to-income ratios - Multiple delinquencies
š Perfect For - Machine Learning Practice: Binary classification with real patterns - Credit Risk Modelling: Learn actual lending criteria - Portfolio Projects: Build impressive, explainable models - Feature Engineering: Rich dataset with meaningful relationships - Business Analytics: Understand financial decision-making
š Quick Stats
Approval Rates by Product - Credit Card: 60.4% more lenient) - Personal Loan: 46.9 (standard) - Line of Credit: 52.6% (moderate)
Loan Intent (Best ā Worst Approval Odds) 1. Education (63% approved) 2. Personal (58% approved) 3. Medical/Home (52% approved) 4. Business (48% approved) 5. Debt Consolidation (40% approved)
Credit Score Distribution - Mean: 644 - Range: 300-850 - Realistic bell curve around 600-700
Income Distribution - Mean: $50,063 - Median: $41,608 - Range: $15K - $250K
šÆ Expected Model Performance
With proper feature engineering and tuning: - Accuracy: 75-85% - ROC-AUC: 0.80-0.90 - F1-Score: 0.75-0.85
Important: Feature importance should show: 1. Credit Score (most important) 2. Debt-to-Income Ratio 3. Delinquencies 4. Loan Amount 5. Income
If your model shows different patterns, something's wrong!
š Use Cases & Projects
Beginner - Binary classification with XGBoost/Random Forest - EDA and visualization practice - Feature importance analysis
Intermediate - Custom threshold optimization (profit maximization) - Cost-sensitive learning (false positive vs false negative) - Ensemble methods and stacking
Advanced - Explainable AI (SHAP, LIME) - Fairness analysis across demographics - Production-ready API with FastAPI/Flask - Streamlit deployment with business rules
ā ļø Important Notes
This is SYNTHETIC Data - Generated based on real banking criteria - No real customer data was used - Safe for public sharing and portfolio use
Limitations - Simplified approval logic (real banks use 100+ factors) - No temporal component (no time series) - Single country/currency assumed (USD) - No external factors (economy, market conditions)
Educational Purpose This dataset is designed for: - Learning credit risk modeling - Portfolio projects - ML practice - Understanding lending criteria
NOT for: - Actual lending decisions - Financial advice - Production use without validation
š¤ Contributing
Found an issue? Have suggestions? - Open an issue on GitHub - Suggest i...
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The dataset shows structure of interest rates
Note: 1. For the year 1995-96, interest rate on deposits of maturity above 3 years, and from 1996-97 onwards, interest rates on deposit for all the maturities refer to the deposit rates of 5 major public sector banks as at end-March. 2. From 1994-95 onwards, data on minimum general key lending rates prescribed by RBI refers to the prime lending rates of 5 major public sector banks. 3. For 2011-12, data on deposit rates and Base rates of 5 major public sector banks refer to the period up to July 31, 2010. From July 1, 2010 BPLR System is replaced by Base Rate System. Accordingly the data reflects the Base Rate of five major public sector banks. Data for 2010-11 for Call/Notice Money rates are average of April-July 2010. 4. Data for dividend rate and yield rate for units of UTI are based on data received from Unit Trust of India. 5. Data on annual(gross) redemption yield of Government of India securities are based on redemption yield which is computed from 2000-01 as the mean of the daily weighted average yield of the transactions in each traded security. The weight is calculated as the share of the transaction in a given security in the aggregated value. 6. Data on prime lending rates for IDBI, IFCI and ICICI for the year 1999-00 relates to long-term prime lending rates in January 2000. 7. Data on prime lending rates for State Financial Corporation for all the years and for other term lending institutions from 2002-03 onwards relate to long-term (over 36-month) PLR. 8. Data on prime lending rate of IIBI/ IRBI from 2003-04 onwards relate to single PLR effective July 31, 2003. 9. IDBI ceased to be term lending institution on its conversion into a banking entity effective October 11, 2004. 10. ICICI ceased to be a term-lending institution after its merger with ICICI Bank. 11. Figures in brackets indicate lending rate charged to small-scale industries. 12. IFCI has become a non-bank financial company. 13. IIBI is in the process of voluntary winding up. 14. Figures for 2015-16 are as on July 14, 2015. 15. 2024-25 data : As on September 1, 2024; except for WALRs, WADTDR and 1-year median MCLR (July 2023). 16. * : Data on deposit and lending rates relate to five major Public Sector Banks up to 2003-04. While for the subsequent years, they relate to five major banks. 17. # : Savings deposit rate from 2011-12 onwards relates to balance up to 1 lakh. Savings deposit rate was deregulated with effect from October 25, 2011. 18. $ : Data on Weighted Average Lending Rates (WALRs), weighted Average Domestic Term Deposit Rate (WADTDR) and 1-year median marginal cost of funds-based lending rate (MCLR) pertain to all scheduled commercial banks (excluding RRBs and SFBs). 19. Data on lending rates in column (7) relate to Benchmark Prime Lending Rate (BPLR) for the period 2004-05 to 2009-10; Base Rate for 2010-11 to 2015-16 and Marginal Cost of Funds Based Lending Rate (MCLR) (overnight) for 2016-17 onwards. BPLR system was replaced by the Base Rate System from July 1, 2010, which, in turn, was replaced by the MCLR System effective April 1, 2016.
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This dataset tracks the policy interest rates of the worldās top 8 central banks from 1980 to 2025, offering a unique longitudinal view into global monetary trends. Central banks included are: the Federal Reserve (USA), European Central Bank (ECB), Bank of England (BoE), Bank of Japan (BoJ), Bank of Canada (BoC), Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA), Swiss National Bank (SNB), and Sveriges Riksbank (Sweden). Note: The ECB's data begins in 1999, aligning with its establishment.
Ideal for time-series analysis, forecasting, and macroeconomic research, this dataset can be used to study inflation targeting regimes, financial crises, and policy divergence/convergence across developed economies.
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View data of the Effective Federal Funds Rate, or the interest rate depository institutions charge each other for overnight loans of funds.
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This dataset includes various economic indicators such as stock market performance, inflation rates, GDP, interest rates, employment data, and housing index, all of which are crucial for understanding the state of the economy. By analysing this dataset, one can gain insights into the causes and effects of past recessions in the US, which can inform investment decisions and policy-making.
There are 20 columns and 343 rows spanning 1990-04 to 2022-10
The columns are:
1. Price: Price column refers to the S&P 500 lot price over the years. The S&P 500 is a stock market index that measures the performance of 500 large companies listed on stock exchanges in the United States. This variable represents the value of the S&P 500 index from 1980 to present. Industrial Production: This variable measures the output of industrial establishments in the manufacturing, mining, and utilities sectors. It reflects the overall health of the manufacturing industry, which is a key component of the US economy.
2. INDPRO: Industrial production measures the output of the manufacturing, mining, and utility sectors of the economy. It provides insights into the overall health of the economy, as a decline in industrial production can indicate a slowdown in economic activity. This data can be used by policymakers and investors to assess the state of the economy and make informed decisions.
3. CPI: CPI stands for Consumer Price Index, which measures the change in the prices of a basket of goods and services that consumers purchase. CPI inflation represents the rate at which the prices of goods and services in the economy are increasing.
4. Treasure Bill rate (3 month to 30 Years): Treasury bills (T-bills) are short-term debt securities issued by the US government. This variable represents the interest rates on T-bills with maturities ranging from 3 months to 30 years. It reflects the cost of borrowing money for the government and provides an indication of the overall level of interest rates in the economy.
5. GDP: GDP stands for Gross Domestic Product, which is the value of all goods and services produced in a country. This dataset is taking into account only the Nominal GDP values. Nominal GDP represents the total value of goods and services produced in the US economy without accounting for inflation.
6. Rate: The Federal Funds Rate is the interest rate at which depository institutions lend reserve balances to other depository institutions overnight. It is set by the Federal Reserve and is used as a tool to regulate the money supply in the economy.
7. BBK_Index: The BBKI are maintained and produced by the Indiana Business Research Center at the Kelley School of Business at Indiana University. The BBK Coincident and Leading Indexes and Monthly GDP Growth for the U.S. are constructed from a collapsed dynamic factor analysis of a panel of 490 monthly measures of real economic activity and quarterly real GDP growth. The BBK Leading Index is the leading subcomponent of the cycle measured in standard deviation units from trend real GDP growth.
8. Housing Index: This variable represents the value of the housing market in the US. It is calculated based on the prices of homes sold in the market and provides an indication of the overall health of the housing market.
9. Recession binary column: This variable is a binary indicator that takes a value of 1 when the US economy is in a recession and 0 otherwise. It is based on the official business cycle dates provided by the National Bureau of Economic Research.
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The benchmark interest rate in Japan was last recorded at 0.50 percent. This dataset provides - Japan Interest Rate - actual values, historical data, forecast, chart, statistics, economic calendar and news.
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The raw data that is used in this dataset is the basic OHLC time series dataset for a gold market of the last 20 years collected and verified from different exchanges. This dataset contains over 8677 daily candle prices (rows) and in order to make it wealthy, extra datasets were merged with it to provide more details to each data frame. The sub-datasets contain historical economic information such as interest rates, inflation rates, and others that are highly related and affecting the gold market movement.
Raw dataset:
Time Range: 1988-08-01 to 2023-11-10 Number of data entries: 4050 Number of features: 4 (open, high, low, close OHLC daily candle price)
What are done to prepare this dataset : 1. Starting Exploratory Data Analysis (EDA) for all the raw datasets. 2. Find and fill in missing days. 3. Merge all the datasets into one master dataset based on the time index. 4. Verify the merge process. 5. Check and remove Duplicates. 6. Check and fill in missing values. 7. Including the basic technical indicators and price moving averages. 8. Outliers Inspection and treatment by different methods. 9. Adding targets. 10. Feature Analysis to identify the importance of each feature. 11. Final check.
After data preparation and feature engineering:
Time Range: 1999-12-30 to 2023-10-01
Number of data entries: 8677
Number of featuers: 28
Features list: open, high, low, close (OHLC daily candle price) dxy_open, dxy_close, dxy_high, dxy_low, fred_fedfunds, usintr, usiryy (Ecnomic inducators) RSI, MACD, MACD_signal, MACD_hist, ADX, CCI (Technical indicators) ROC SMA_10, SMA_20, EMA_10, EMA_20, SMA_50, EMA_50, SMA_100, SMA_200, EMA_100, EMA_200 (Moving avrages)
Targets List: next_1_day_price next_3_day_price next_7_day_price next_30_day_price next_1_day_Price_Change next_3_day_Price_Change next_7_day_Price_Change next_30_day_Price_Change next_30_day_Price_Change next_1_day_price_direction( Up, Same ,Down) next_3_day_price_direction( Up, Same ,Down) next_7_day_price_direction( Up, Same ,Down) next_30_day_price_direction( Up, Same ,Down)
Abbreviations of Features: dxy = US Dollar Index fred_fedfunds= Effective Federal Funds Rate usintr= US Interest Rate usiryy= US Inflation Rate YOY RSI= Relative Strength Index MACD= Moving Average Convergence Divergence ADX= Avrerage Directional Index CCI=Commodity Channel Index ROC= Rate of Change SMA= Simple Moving Average EMA= Exponential Moving Average
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This dataset was generated by parsing PDFs released by the US Treasury for foreign exchange. An edited version (quarterly-edited.csv) includes fixes for typos in the Treasury data.
Usage caveats from the documentation:
"Exceptions to using the reporting rates as shown in the report are: * collections and refunds to be valued at specified rates set by international agreements, * conversions of one foreign currency into another, * foreign currencies sold for dollars, and * other types of transactions affecting dollar appropriations. (See Volume I Treasury Financial Manual 2-3200 for further details.)
Since the exchange rates in this report are not current rates of exchange, they should not be used to value transactions affecting dollar appropriations."
Additional caveats:
This unified dataset should be used only for reference or ballpark estimation, and not for anything like automated valuation. The reason is because there's still a lot of messiness involving countries and changing units- when in doubt or if required, please do additional research to confirm the historical rates are indeed as stated.
Future plans:
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Due to the large size of the complete dataset, a selected set of data representing a wide range of commonly used data items, has been created that can be easily managed and downloaded. The selected data file includes general hospital information, utilization data by payer, revenue data by payer, expense data by natural expense category, financial ratios, and labor information.
There are two groups of data contained in this dataset: 1) Selected Data - Calendar Year: To make it easier to compare hospitals by year, hospital reports with report periods ending within a given calendar year are grouped together. The Pivot Tables for a specific calendar year are also found here. 2) Selected Data - Fiscal Year: Hospital reports with report periods ending within a given fiscal year (July-June) are grouped together.
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1) Data Introduction ⢠The credit_risk Dataset is a structured dataset designed to predict loan default status (default) based on a customerās financial condition, credit history, and loan-related information. Each sample includes various features necessary for assessing the applicantās credit risk.
2) Data Utilization (1) Characteristics of the credit_risk Dataset: ⢠The dataset includes key financial indicators such as current account balance, savings balance, loan amount, job type, and number of existing loans. The default column serves as a binary classification label indicating whether the customer failed to repay the loan.
(2) Applications of the credit_risk Dataset: ⢠Loan default prediction model training: The dataset can be used to train machine learning-based binary classification models that estimate a customerās credit risk in advance and support decisions on loan approvals. ⢠Credit risk analysis and policy development: By analyzing the relationship between financial status and credit history, the dataset can help in setting credit scoring criteria, adjusting risk-based interest rates, and personalizing financial services.
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TwitterSpatial analysis and statistical summaries of the Protected Areas Database of the United States (PAD-US) provide land managers and decision makers with a general assessment of management intent for biodiversity protection, natural resource management, and recreation access across the nation. The PAD-US 3.0 Combined Fee, Designation, Easement feature class (with Military Lands and Tribal Areas from the Proclamation and Other Planning Boundaries feature class) was modified to remove overlaps, avoiding overestimation in protected area statistics and to support user needs. A Python scripted process ("PADUS3_0_CreateVectorAnalysisFileScript.zip") associated with this data release prioritized overlapping designations (e.g. Wilderness within a National Forest) based upon their relative biodiversity conservation status (e.g. GAP Status Code 1 over 2), public access values (in the order of Closed, Restricted, Open, Unknown), and geodatabase load order (records are deliberately organized in the PAD-US full inventory with fee owned lands loaded before overlapping management designations, and easements). The Vector Analysis File ("PADUS3_0VectorAnalysisFile_ClipCensus.zip") associated item of PAD-US 3.0 Spatial Analysis and Statistics ( https://doi.org/10.5066/P9KLBB5D ) was clipped to the Census state boundary file to define the extent and serve as a common denominator for statistical summaries. Boundaries of interest to stakeholders (State, Department of the Interior Region, Congressional District, County, EcoRegions I-IV, Urban Areas, Landscape Conservation Cooperative) were incorporated into separate geodatabase feature classes to support various data summaries ("PADUS3_0VectorAnalysisFileOtherExtents_Clip_Census.zip") and Comma-separated Value (CSV) tables ("PADUS3_0SummaryStatistics_TabularData_CSV.zip") summarizing "PADUS3_0VectorAnalysisFileOtherExtents_Clip_Census.zip" are provided as an alternative format and enable users to explore and download summary statistics of interest (Comma-separated Table [CSV], Microsoft Excel Workbook [.XLSX], Portable Document Format [.PDF] Report) from the PAD-US Lands and Inland Water Statistics Dashboard ( https://www.usgs.gov/programs/gap-analysis-project/science/pad-us-statistics ). In addition, a "flattened" version of the PAD-US 3.0 combined file without other extent boundaries ("PADUS3_0VectorAnalysisFile_ClipCensus.zip") allow for other applications that require a representation of overall protection status without overlapping designation boundaries. The "PADUS3_0VectorAnalysis_State_Clip_CENSUS2020" feature class ("PADUS3_0VectorAnalysisFileOtherExtents_Clip_Census.gdb") is the source of the PAD-US 3.0 raster files (associated item of PAD-US 3.0 Spatial Analysis and Statistics, https://doi.org/10.5066/P9KLBB5D ). Note, the PAD-US inventory is now considered functionally complete with the vast majority of land protection types represented in some manner, while work continues to maintain updates and improve data quality (see inventory completeness estimates at: http://www.protectedlands.net/data-stewards/ ). In addition, changes in protected area status between versions of the PAD-US may be attributed to improving the completeness and accuracy of the spatial data more than actual management actions or new acquisitions. USGS provides no legal warranty for the use of this data. While PAD-US is the official aggregation of protected areas ( https://www.fgdc.gov/ngda-reports/NGDA_Datasets.html ), agencies are the best source of their lands data.
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1) Data Introduction ⢠The (Cleaned) Credit Score Dataset for Classification Dataset is a structured dataset designed for training machine learning models to classify individuals into credit score categories based on various credit-related attributes.
2) Data Utilization (1) Characteristics of the (Cleaned) Credit Score Dataset for Classification Dataset: ⢠The dataset includes key financial variables that influence credit scoring, such as delinquency history, credit limit, credit utilization ratio, and repayment records. The credit score category serves as the multiclass classification label.
(2) Applications of the (Cleaned) Credit Score Dataset for Classification Dataset: ⢠Credit score classification model training: The dataset can be used to train machine learning models that predict an individualās credit score category based on financial indicators. ⢠Financial risk assessment and customer segmentation: It can support tasks such as loan approval decision-making, interest rate setting, and personalized financial product recommendations by identifying a customerās credit level in advance.
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The benchmark interest rate in Canada was last recorded at 2.25 percent. This dataset provides - Canada Interest Rate - actual values, historical data, forecast, chart, statistics, economic calendar and news.
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Huge US Stocks prices + 1292 columns extra data from Indicators. This Dataset provides historical Open, High, Low, Close, and Volume (OHLCV) prices of stocks traded in the United States financial markets AND calculated 1292 columns of indicators. You can use all this hyge data for stock price predictions.
Columns with Momentum Indicator values ADX - Average Directional Movement Index ADXR - Average Directional Movement Index Rating APO - Absolute Price Oscillator AROON - Aroon AROONOSC - Aroon Oscillator BOP - Balance Of Power CCI - Commodity Channel Index CMO - Chande Momentum Oscillator DX - Directional Movement Index MACD - Moving Average Convergence/Divergence MACDEXT - MACD with controllable MA type MACDFIX - Moving Average Convergence/Divergence Fix 12/26 MFI - Money Flow Index MINUS_DI - Minus Directional Indicator MINUS_DM - Minus Directional Movement MOM - Momentum PLUS_DI - Plus Directional Indicator PLUS_DM - Plus Directional Movement PPO - Percentage Price Oscillator ROC - Rate of change : ((price/prevPrice)-1)*100 ROCP - Rate of change Percentage: (price-prevPrice)/prevPrice ROCR - Rate of change ratio: (price/prevPrice) ROCR100 - Rate of change ratio 100 scale: (price/prevPrice)*100 RSI - Relative Strength Index STOCH - Stochastic STOCHF - Stochastic Fast STOCHRSI - Stochastic Relative Strength Index TRIX - 1-day Rate-Of-Change (ROC) of a Triple Smooth EMA ULTOSC - Ultimate Oscillator WILLR - Williams' %R
Columns with Volatility Indicator values ATR - Average True Range NATR - Normalized Average True Range TRANGE - True Range
Columns with Volume Indicator values AD - Chaikin A/D Line ADOSC - Chaikin A/D Oscillator OBV - On Balance Volume
Columns with Overlap Studies values BBANDS - Bollinger Bands DEMA - Double Exponential Moving Average EMA - Exponential Moving Average HT_TRENDLINE - Hilbert Transform - Instantaneous Trendline KAMA - Kaufman Adaptive Moving Average MA - Moving average MAMA - MESA Adaptive Moving Average MAVP - Moving average with variable period MIDPOINT - MidPoint over period MIDPRICE - Midpoint Price over period SAR - Parabolic SAR SAREXT - Parabolic SAR - Extended SMA - Simple Moving Average T3 - Triple Exponential Moving Average (T3) TEMA - Triple Exponential Moving Average TRIMA - Triangular Moving Average WMA - Weighted Moving Average
Columns with Cycle Indicator values HT_DCPERIOD - Hilbert Transform - Dominant Cycle Period HT_DCPHASE - Hilbert Transform - Dominant Cycle Phase HT_PHASOR - Hilbert Transform - Phasor Components HT_SINE - Hilbert Transform - SineWave HT_TRENDMODE - Hilbert Transform - Trend vs Cycle Mode
If you want to download actual data - on today for example, then you can use python code from my github. tickers = ['CE.US', 'WELL.US', 'GRMN.US', 'IEX.US', 'CAG.US', 'BEN.US', 'ATO.US', 'WY.US', 'TSCO.US', 'COR.US', 'MOS.US', 'SWKS.US', 'ORCL.US', 'URI.US', 'INCY.US', 'MPC.US', 'HD.US', 'PPG.US', 'NUE.US', 'DDOG.US', 'HSIC.US', 'CAT.US', 'HSY.US', 'MKTX.US', 'CCEP.US', 'GWW.US', 'LEN.US', 'IFF.US', 'GL.US', 'MDB.US', 'SNPS.US', 'KR.US', 'DVN.US', 'SYY.US', 'USB.US', 'DRI.US', 'PARA.US', 'FMC.US', 'UBER.US', 'WRK.US', 'DLR.US', 'SO.US', 'AMGN.US', 'MA.US', 'STT.US', 'BWA.US', 'KVUE.US', 'GFS.US', 'BBY.US', 'BK.US', 'MRVL.US', 'VFC.US', 'EIX.US', 'ADSK.US', 'ZBH.US', 'MU.US', 'HUBB.US', 'PEAK.US', 'CVX.US', 'CPB.US', 'GILD.US', 'BXP.US', 'DD.US', 'MCD.US', 'KDP.US', 'GE.US', 'PKG.US', 'HST.US', 'WTW.US', 'XOM.US', 'ED.US', 'SPG.US', 'PFG.US', 'LVS.US', 'FAST.US', 'ROST.US', 'TTD.US', 'CNC.US', 'PGR.US', 'CMI.US', 'TEAM.US', 'MELI.US', 'BKR.US', 'EBAY.US', 'CPRT.US', 'MSFT.US', 'HOLX.US', 'ABBV.US', 'AMZN.US', 'FE.US', 'WYNN.US', 'KMI.US', 'APA.US', 'CRWD.US', 'DPZ.US', 'EQT.US', 'NOC.US', 'TAP.US', 'ETR.US', 'T.US', 'OMC.US', 'MTCH.US', 'TRMB.US', 'EXPE.US', 'DTE.US', 'PNR.US', 'LH.US', 'ALL.US', 'CTRA.US', 'VMC.US', 'XRAY.US', 'NWS.US', 'GOOGL.US', 'WEC.US', 'BIIB.US', 'LLY.US', 'BMY.US', 'STE.US', 'NI.US', 'MKC.US', 'AMT.US', 'CFG.US', 'LW.US', 'HIG.US', 'ETSY.US', 'AON.US', 'ULTA.US', 'DVA.US', 'LKQ.US', 'MPWR.US', 'TEL.US', 'FICO.US', 'CVS.US', 'CMA.US', 'NVDA.US', 'TDG.US', 'AWK.US', 'PSA.US', 'FOXA.US', 'ON.US', 'ODFL.US', 'NVR.US', 'ROP.US', 'TFX.US', 'HLT.US', 'EXPD.US', 'FOX.US', 'D.US', 'AMAT.US', 'AZO.US', 'DLTR.US', 'TT.US', 'SBUX.US', 'JNJ.US', 'HAS.US', 'DASH.US', 'NRG.US', 'JNPR.US', 'BIO.US', 'AMD.US', 'NFLX.US', 'VLTO.US', 'BRO.US', 'REGN.US', 'WRB.US', 'LRCX.US', 'SYK.US', 'MCO.US', 'CSGP.US', 'TROW.US', 'ETN.US', 'RTX.US', 'CRM.US', 'SIRI.US', 'UPS.US', 'HES.US', 'RSG.US', 'PEP.US', 'MET.US', 'HON.US', 'IQV.US', 'JPM.US', 'DG.US', 'CBRE.US', 'NDSN.US', 'DOW.US', 'SBAC.US', 'TSN.US', 'IT.US', 'WM.US', 'TPR.US', 'IBM.US', 'CHTR.US', 'HAL.US', 'ROL.US', 'FDS.US', 'SHW.US', 'EW.US', 'RJF.US', 'APH.US', 'AIZ.US', 'ZBRA.US', 'SRE.US', 'CTAS.US', 'PXD.US', 'MTD.US', 'NOW.US', 'MAS.US', 'FFIV.US', 'ELV.US', 'SYF.US', 'CSCO.US', 'APTV...
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The benchmark interest rate in the United States was last recorded at 4 percent. This dataset provides the latest reported value for - United States Fed Funds Rate - plus previous releases, historical high and low, short-term forecast and long-term prediction, economic calendar, survey consensus and news.